Monday, 17 January 2011

Australian Open 2011: Elena Baltacha and Anne Keothavong both progress

• British duo advance to second round on opening day
• Baltacha will next face the former champion Justine Henin

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  • Elena Baltacha
    Elena Baltacha had to come from a set down to book a second-round meeting with Justine Henin. Photograph: PA Wire/PA

    Elena Baltacha set up a second-round meeting against the former Australian Open champion Justine Henin on a day of double success for British women in Melbourne.

    Baltacha, the world No55, overcame three rain delays, a medical time out and the loss of the first set to beat the American qualifier Jamie Hampton 3-6, 6-4, 7-5. The British No1 was then joined in the last 64 by Anne Keothavong, a 7-5, 6-4 winner over Russia's Arina Rodionova.

    It is the first time Keothavong has advanced beyond the first round at Melbourne Park and the 27-year-old Londoner will now face the 30th-seeded German Andrea Petkovic. But it is Baltacha's clash with Henin, defeated in the final against Serena Williams last year, which catches the eye.

    Asked about her prospects against seven-times grand slam winner, Baltacha replied: "I think I've got to believe that I've got a chance, because otherwise there's no point playing. The chances are probably slim. But on the match day, I'm going to go out and I'm going to fire. I've got nothing to lose at all."

    Henin saw off a spirited challenge from India's Sania Mirza to advance 5-7, 6-3, 6-1 in her first official match since sustaining an elbow injury at Wimbledon last year. The Belgian has admitted she does not see herself getting back to her best until the summer – something that gives Baltacha hope.

    "Obviously she's been out for quite a while. You've got to go out there and show no respect. Because once you give someone respect, that's it. If they know it, you're not going to be fully focused on your game."

    Meanwhile, Keothavong felt her win vindicated a decision to carry on playing tennis after considering her future following a first-round defeat at last year's US Open. "In New York it was very different. I think I was quite emotional after the match," the British No2 said.

    "I'd been on a run of results that hadn't been going my way. And, yeah, I did consider things. But I'm here after a great off-season. I don't know how much longer I have in the game, but I'm here to make the most of what I've got. While I'm injury-free, I just want to get out there and enjoy it."

David Cameron: Andy Coulson deserves to be given a second chance

PM defends his communications director but refuses to deny claims that Coulson offered to resign

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  • Andy Coulson
    David Cameron said Andy Coulson 'should not be punished twice for the same offence'. Photograph: David Moir/Reuters

    David Cameron said today he has given Andy Coulson, his director of communications, a "second chance" following revelations about phone-hacking at News of the World when he was editor and warned that his aide should not be "punished twice for the same offence".

    Speaking on BBC Radio 4's Today programme, the prime minister stood by his communication chief as he failed to quash weekend reports that Coulson offered to resign for the damage to the government caused by his involvement in a newspaper phone-hacking row.

    But he notably did not say, as he as done in previous comments about the affair, that he accepted his PR chief's assurances that he had been unaware of hacking during his editorship of the tabloid.

    Cameron said that "bad things happened" when Coulson was editor of the News of the World, but resigned "when he found out about them", which the prime minister said was "the right thing to do".

    "I almost think there is a danger at the moment that he is effectively being punished twice for the same offence. I judge his work by what he has done for us ... I gave him a second chance. I think in life sometimes it's right to give someone a second chance. He resigned for what went wrong at News of the World. I would just argue working for the government, I think he has done a good job."

    He added: "Of course he was embarrassed, but he has had a second chance from me to do this job. I think he has done the job in a very good way."

    According to the Mail on Sunday, Coulson has admitted that the allegations concerning the bugging of celebrities' phones while he was editor of the News of the World are making it harder for him to carry out his duties at No 10.But the paper said Cameron and the chancellor, George Osborne, had turned down his offer to resign, instead offering him total support in his battle to clear his name.

    Coulson quit as editor of the News of the World in 2007 over the phone-hacking row, but has always maintained he did not know it was going on.

    Since then, a string of allegations have surfaced that have cast doubt on the notion that phone tapping at the paper was down to one rogue reporter, Clive Goodman, acting alone.

    Pressed on the claims today that Coulson offered to quit over recent developments, Cameron refused to divulge "private conversations" other than to say that Coulson was "extremely embarrassed" by the reports "as anyone who is human would be".

    But the prime minister said that he judged his staff on whether they were doing a "good job", telling BBC Radio 4's Today programme that Coulson "can't be responsible for the fact that people write articles about him".

    It emerged last week that the Crown Prosecution Service is due to undertake a comprehensive review of phone-hacking material, including examining evidence that has emerged since the trial of Goodman, formerly royal editor at the News of the World, and private investigator Glenn Mulcaire, including revelations published by the Guardian which suggest that phone-hacking was rife at the paper.

    Coulson has always maintained he knew nothing about Goodman's actions.

Child sex trafficking in UK on the rise with even younger victims targeted

White, black and Asian children at risk with abusers using mobiles and web to groom victims, say Barnardo's

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  • Child abuse victim
    Tim, a victim of abuse who was 14 when he was groomed by one man. Photograph: Martin Godwin for the Guardian

    The trafficking of British children around UK cities for sexual exploitation is on the increase with some as young as 10 being groomed by predatory abusers, a report reveals today.

    The average age of victims of such abuse has fallen from 15 to about 13 in five years, according to the report by Barnardo's, the UK's biggest children's charity.

    But victims continue to be missed as telltale signs are overlooked "from the frontline of children's services to the corridors of Whitehall," said Anne Marie Carrie, the charity's new chief executive.

    "Wherever we have looked for exploitation, we have found it. But the real tragedy is we believe this is just the tip of the iceberg," she said.

    Calling for a minister to be put in charge of the government's response, she said: "Without a minister with overall responsibility the government response is likely to remain inadequate."

    The main findings from the report, called Puppet on a String, include:

    • Trafficking becoming more common and sexual exploitation more organised.

    • Grooming methods becoming more sophisticated as abusers use a range of technology – mobile phones, including texts and picture messages, Bluetooth technology, and the internet – to control and abuse children.

    The charity dealt with 1,098 children who had been groomed for sex last year, a 4% increase on the previous year.

    A recent focus on the ethnicity of abusers risks putting more children in danger, said Carrie. "I am not going to say that ethnicity is not an issue in some geographical areas, it clearly is. But to think of it as the only determining factor is misleading and dangerous."

    The issue has come under the spotlight after cases in Derby, where ringleaders of a gang of Asian men were jailed for grooming girls as young as 12 for sex, and in Rochdale, where nine mainly Asian men were arrested on Tuesday last week on suspicion of grooming a group of white teenage girls.

    Carrie warned of the risk of the issue becoming dangerously simplified after comments from the former home secretary Jack Straw, who said some Pakistani men saw white girls as "easy meat".

    The charity dealt with white, black and Asian victims, she said – whose voices were being lost. "Profiling and stereotyping is dangerous – we are scared that victims will say: 'I don't fit into that pattern, so I'm not being abused'."

    The report identifies many different patterns of abuse, ranging from inappropriate relationships to organised networks of child trafficking.

    Of Barnardo's 22 specialist services surveyed for the report, 21 had seen evidence of the trafficking of children through organised networks for sex, often with multiple men.

    Among the cases highlighted is Emma, who met her first "boyfriend" when she was 14. In his 30s, he bought her presents, said he loved her, then forced her to have sex with his friends. She was shipped around the country and raped by countless men. "I got taken to flats, I don't know where they were and men would be brought to me. I was never given any names, and I don't remember their faces," she said.

    The "inappropriate relationship" usually involved an older abuser with control over a child. Such cases included Sophie, who was 13 when she met her "gorgeous" 18-year-old boyfriend at a cousin's 21st birthday party. After initially treating her well, he isolated her from her family and became violent. When police rescued her, they told her the man was 34, with a criminal record for child abuse. "I said they were lying. I thought I was in love, I thought it was normal," she said.

    The "boyfriend" model, sees girls groomed, often by a younger man, who passes her on to older men. In one case an Asian teenager from the north-west described being dragged out of a car by her hair by her "boyfriend", who took her to a hotel room "to have his friends over and do what they wanted to me".

    Boys are also vulnerable: a 14-year-old, Tim, was groomed by one man then expected to have sex with many more. "After a while there would be three or four guys all at once. It was horrible and very scary," he said.

    Abusers are increasingly using the internet and mobile phone technology to control victims. Teens are being coerced into sending, or posing for, sexually explicit photos which are then used to blackmail and control them, said Carrie. "The abuser then sells the images, and threatens to send the pictures to the girl's parents or school if she does not do x, y and z."

    Often abusers target the most vulnerable: children in care, foster homes or from chaotic backgrounds. But children of all backgrounds are at risk, said Carrie.

    Penny Nicholls, director of children and young people at The Children's Society, said the Barnardo's findings echoed their experiences. "We join Barnardo's in calling on the government to take urgent action, ensuring a minister has special responsibility for overseeing a countrywide response to combat sexual exploitation."

    A Department for Education spokeswoman said: "This is a complex problem and we are determined to tackle it effectively by working collaboratively right across government and with national and local agencies."

Tunisian protesters in fresh clashes with security forces

Demonstrators urge ruling party to give up power as interim leaders prepare to announce a government

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    Tunisian security forces beat a protester in Tunis today. Photograph: Fred Dufour/AFP/Getty Images

    Tunisian security forces used teargas, water cannon and warning shots to try to break up a crowd that gathered in the centre of Tunis this morning to demand that the ruling party give up power.

    About 2,000 people assembled on the capital's main boulevard in a protest against the RCD party, chanting: "Out with the RCD" and, "Out with the party of the dictatorship".

    The demonstration comes as Tunisia's interim leaders prepare to announce a new, national unity government in an attempt to calm tensions after days of violence followed the fall of the president, Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali.

    There have also been unconfirmed reports that the gunmen behind the shooting rampages that came in the wake of Ben Ali's escape to Saudi Arabia on Friday have been arrested or killed.

    In an unprecedented transition of power in the Arab world, the Tunisian prime minister, Mohamed Ghannouchi – a longtime ally of Ben Ali – has said the new government will include former regime opponents long locked out of access to power.

    Many Tunisians are hopeful about their first new government in 23 years but wary of what the future may hold. Some countries – including Tunisia's former colonial ruler, France – have called for restraint as unrest in the north African country plays out.

    Although riot police used violence to disperse the protesters, a semblance of normal daily life returned in some areas of the capital today, with once-shuttered shops, petrol stations, pharmacies and supermarkets reopening and many people returning to their jobs.

    Hundreds of stranded tourists were still being evacuated from the country. Foreign airlines were gradually resuming services that were halted when Tunisian airspace closed amid the upheaval.

    The constitution requires elections within 60 days of the departure of a leader, but one opposition leader said the Tunisian authorities could instead announce presidential elections in the next six months.

    The opposition PDP party has pushed for the later timetable, arguing that Tunisians need time to familiarise themselves with parties so that elections can be credible after decades of one-party rule.

    Nejib Chebbi, the longtime leader of the PDP, and two other leaders of opposition parties are expected to gain posts in the new government along with some members of Ben Ali's former regime, according to a party official.

    Moncef Marzouki, a professor of medicine who leads the once-banned CPR party from exile in France, where he has lived for the past 20 years, told France-Info radio he would be a candidate in the presidential election.

    "The question is whether there will be or won't be free and fair elections," said Marzouki, whose movement is of the secular left.

    The new government's first task will be restoring order. A month of street protests against the years of repression, corruption and a lack of jobs for Tunisia's well-educated youths brought down Ben Ali, and looting, gun battles and score-settling have followed.

    Over the weekend, police arrested dozens of people – including the top presidential security chief – as tensions appeared to mount between Tunisians delighted at Ben Ali's departure and loyalists fearful of losing their perks.

    Looting escalated as ordinary Tunisians saw worsening shortages of essentials such as milk, bread and fish.

    A gun battle also broke out around the presidential palace, in Carthage, on Sunday afternoon. The army and members of the newly appointed presidential guard fought off attacks from militias loyal to Ben Ali, according to a member of the new presidential guard. Another two-hour gun battle behind the interior ministry in central Tunis raged at the same time.

    The prime minister said the police and the army had arrested members of the armed groups but would not reveal how many had been caught.

    "We won't be tolerant towards these people," said Ghannouchi, adding: "The coming days will show who is behind them."

    The former presidential security chief Ali Seriati and his deputy were charged with a plot against state security, aggressive acts and "provoking disorder, murder and pillaging", the TAP state news agency reported.

    The downfall of the 74-year-old Ben Ali, who took power in a bloodless coup in 1987, served as a warning to other autocratic leaders in the Arab world.

    The Mediterranean nation, a supporter of the US anti-terrorism policy and a popular tourist destination known for its wide beaches, deserts and ancient ruins, had seemed more stable than many in the region before the uprising that began last month.

Critics of public service reform plans should 'grow up', says David Cameron

Prime minister defends plans to introduce more choice into public services and says the government has a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to make reforms

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  • David Cameron speaks at the Royal Society of Arts in London on 17 January 2010
    David Cameron speaks at the Royal Society of Arts in London on 17 January 2010. Photograph: Pool/REUTERS

    David Cameron today urged critics of his plans to introduce greater choice in public services to grow up, and realise the public are concerned by the standard of a public service rather than whether it is delivered by a charity, private company or a public sector worker.

    He said the government had a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to modernise public services but Labour claimed he had broken an election promise not to impose top-down organisational change.

    He called for a more elevated national debate, adding that his drive to introduce greater choice and act with speed in part stemmed from his reading of what he described as the intriguing autobiography of Tony Blair.

    He said the former prime minister had written in his memoirs he has constantly regretted not going further and faster in his public service reform programme.

    Cameron was speaking after delivering a major speech on public services reform ahead of the NHS reform bill this Wednesday and an education bill next week. He admitted parts of the public were rolling their eyes at the prospect of another government promising to transform public services.

    He is also under intense public pressure to reassure the public that the NHS reforms are wise at a time of spending restraint, as well as to show how the scale of the reforms were openly trailed by the Conservatives in opposition. He argued that unless he pressed ahead with reform, a form of institutional inertia would take hold.

    He denied he had misled the public ahead of the election by promising he would not introduce another top-down NHS reorganisation, arguing that his modernisation was being driven from below by the needs of GPs and patients. Downing Street has decreed that the NHS changes are described as modernisation and not reform.

    In the question-and-answer session following the speech at the Royal Society of Arts in London, he denied he had intended to describe the NHS as second rate, as he had in an interview on BBC Radio 4's Today programme, saying he meant to say second best.

    But he insisted there was a problem in that the NHS was receiving near-European style levels of spending yet the quality of care in cancer, strokes and heart attacks fell short.

    He said at present in the NHS there was not enough incentive to improve health outcomes and promised he wanted to do more to ensure that measures of patient satisfaction were included in any future assessment of the NHS.

    Cameron's speech was designed to provide an overarching context to the public service reforms being introduced by the government, as well as to reassure the public's doubts about what some fear is a near-Maoist style revolution in public services, repeatedly insisting he was not being driven by an ideology except the improvement of the quality of user care.

    He argued his reforms to the NHS were very different to those that had gone before since they were not being imposed by bureaucrats at the centre.

    He also claimed the health unions, now mounting a strenuous protest over the reforms, felt duty bound to resist change even when in the hearts they knew the change was necessary.

    He said the four big public concerns about reform were: "How can we modernise public services when there is so little money? Why do we believe there is a real prospect of our succeeding in modernising public services when many others have not? Won't there be losers from the changes we make, and finally do we have to make all these changes so fast so soon?"

    In the case of healthcare he said the need to deal with inefficient supply, and ever expanding demand meant the government had no choice but to introduce change at a time of lower spending.

    He insisted he believed his package of reforms will work since he had really tried to learn the lessons of the past. He said the Major and Thatcher governments had understood the need to introduce choice but there had been insufficient respect for the ethos of public services and public service."

    The problem under the last Labour government was the opposite, Tony Blair had introduced foundation hospitals and academies "but did so while maintaining a whole architecture of bureaucracy and targets and significantly understating the valuable role of charities and the voluntary sector".

    He said the lessons from the past are clear: "The right were guilty of focusing too much on markets and the left were guilty of focusing too much on the state. Both forgot the space in between society."

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Talks to find new Lebanon PM postponed



President Michel Sleiman has decided to postpone parliamentary consultations until next Monday.


Middle East Online


By Jocelyne Zablit - BEIRUT


The government collapse plunged the country into a crisis

Talks on naming a new premier in crisis-hit Lebanon were postponed on Monday, as the prosecutor of a UN court probing the murder of ex-premier Rafiq Hariri was set to submit indictments in the case.

"After assessing the positions of various parties in Lebanon ... President Michel Sleiman has decided to postpone parliamentary consultations until Monday, January 24 and Tuesday, January 25, 2011," read a statement released by the president's office.

Talks with parliamentary groups to name a new prime minister had been scheduled after the powerful militant group Hezbollah forced the collapse of the Western-backed government of Saad Hariri, son of the slain leader.

The government collapse plunged the country into a crisis that many fear could escalate into violence.

The Iranian-backed Hezbollah and its allies quit the cabinet on Wednesday because of a dispute over the UN-backed Special Tribunal for Lebanon (STL), set up to investigate Rafiq Hariri's 2005 assassination.

Daniel Bellemare, the prosecutor of the Netherlands-based tribunal, which Hezbollah accuses of being part of a US-Israeli plot, is set to submit his findings in the case to a pre-trial judge on Monday, according to Lebanese officials.

Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah has said he believes the indictments would implicate members of his party, a scenario he has repeatedly rejected.

In a televised speech late Sunday, Nasrallah vowed his group would defend itself against the likely charges, without giving details.

"We will not allow our reputation and our dignity to be tarnished nor will we allow anyone to conspire against us or to unjustly drench us in Hariri's blood," Nasrallah said.

"We will act to defend our dignity, our existence and our reputation," he added.

The Shiite leader said his party would disclose in coming days how it planned to defend itself in light of the indictments, the contents of which will not immediately be made public.

Nasrallah also said his party and its allies would not nominate Hariri for the premiership and accused the United States of scuttling an initiative by regional heavyweights Saudi Arabia and Syria to forge a compromise on the standoff over the tribunal.

"The opposition will not name Saad Hariri for premiership," he said while accusing Western states of pulling all stops to ensure the Sunni leader was reappointed.

"As soon as the opposition raised the possibility of naming a candidate other than Hariri, every single Western capital mobilised" to promote the acting premier, Nasrallah said.

Under the proposed Syrian-Saudi pact, he added, the Lebanese government would pull its judges from the court, cut off its share of funding and relinquish its memorandum of understanding with the STL.

That essentially would mean that Lebanese authorities would cease all cooperation with the court.

Nasrallah accused Hariri of backing out of the deal under US pressure.

The Lebanon's government collapse has sparked a flurry of international diplomatic efforts to contain the political storm that many fear could degenerate into sectarian violence.

France has proposed an international "contact group", similar to that of Bosnia in the 1990s, that would include Saudi Arabia, Syria, Turkey, Qatar and the United States in an effort to defuse tensions.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has confirmed he would participate in the contact group. He also travels Monday to Damascus to meet with Syrian and Qatari leaders on the Lebanon crisis.

US ambassador to Lebanon Maura Connelly, who met with Hariri on Sunday, reiterated her country's unwavering support for the STL while urging all Lebanese factions "maintain calm and exercise restraint at this critical time."